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Joseph Urban and American Scene Design

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 July 2009

Extract

Along with Robert Edmond Jones, Norman Bel Geddes, and Lee Simonson, Joseph Urban brought the New Stagecraft to America in the 1920s. No other designer of his period lavished more lush color on the stage or brought scene design closer to the level his contemporaries called “Art.” Urban produced the backdrops of the famous Follies for Florenz Ziegfeld, and the Metropolitan Opera continued to use his sets for more than two decades after his death. As early as 1917 the New York Times risked the prediction that “when the historian of the New York stage writes the record, of the uplift of the art of its decoration received in the teens of the twentieth century he will have to give the greatest credit to Joseph Urban.” Instead, he has been virtually ignored: for example, Brockett and Findlay in their history of the modern theatre, Century of Innovation, fail to mention Urban at all. In view of his extensive design record it is surprising that he remains so little known.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Society for Theatre Research 1991

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References

1 Urban the Ambidextrous,” New York Tunes, 16 June 1917, VIII, p.5, col. 6Google Scholar.

2 Brockett, Oscar and Findlay, Robert, Century of Innovation: A History of European and American Theatre and Drama Since 1870 (Englewood Cliffs, NJ.: Prentice-Hall, 1973)Google Scholar.

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4 Adams, Brooks, “Urban Renewal,” Art in America, (April 1988): 43Google Scholar.

5 Dixon, John Morris, “Joseph Urban: Too little Known,” Progressive Architecture 69 (January 1988): 2829Google Scholar. In the same vein, Brooks Adams quotes Lewis Mumford's observation about the International Magazine Building: “This is theatric architecture. At the first survey, I feel it is perhaps a stunt. It has an ‘exposition’ quality, observable in other of Mr. Urban's designs. But whatever he does goes with a swing.” (“Urban Renewal,”43.)

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8 The Urban archives are located in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library in the Butler Library, Columbia University, and is the primary source for Urban research.

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11 Steell, Willis, “The Art of Joseph Urban,” The Theatre 22 (September 1915): 124Google Scholar.

12 The Hagenbund is discussed in Powell, Nicholas, The Sacred Spring (Greenwich, Conn.: New York Graphics Society, 1974), 96Google Scholar. Dates for Urban's term as President are found in Borsi, Franco and Godoli, Ezio, Vienna 1900 Architecture and Design (New York: Rizzoli, 1986), 327Google Scholar.

13 Strawn, 275, states that Urban received this commission at the age of 23, which would be 1895. Another source, Freund, F. E. Washburn, “Joseph Urban, Scenic Artist,” International Studio (January 1923): 358, places the date in 1897Google Scholar.

14 Quoting a New York Morning Telegraph story, which is included in Literary Digest 116 (29 July 1933): 21Google Scholar.

15 For a discussion of Urban's European architecture see Borsi and Godoli, 284–289.

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17 See Harry, and Mahnken, Janine, “Joseph Urban: An Appreciation,” Educational Thetre Journal, 5 (1963): 55Google Scholar. A further list of Urban's prizes for illustrations can be found in the entry on him in the National Cyclopedia of American Biography (New York: James T. White and Co., 1936), 25:366Google Scholar.

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19 Borsi and Godoli, 286. This is one of several fine books discussing the development of architecture in Vienna at the turn-of-the-century, and one of the few which prominently mentions Urban.

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28 A full description may be found in Borsi and Godoli, 289.

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30 Quoted from the New York Herald Tribune in Literary Digest (29 July 1933): 21.

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35 For a full description of this production see Gordon, Mel, “Percy Mackaye's Masque of Caliban (1916),” The Drama Review, 20 (June 1976): 93107CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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53 Stern, 115. Also includes excellent reproductions of both theatres, 118–119, 621, and 626–627.

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